Saturday, June 21, 2014

Life and Mission of Swami Vivekananda

Life and Mission of Swami Vivekananda




(Speech delivered by Swami Vivekananda at the Shakespeare Club House, in Pasadena, California, on January 27, 1900)

Now, ladies and gentlemen, the subject for this morning was to have been the Vedanta Philosophy. That subject itself is interesting, but rather dry and very vast. 

Meanwhile, I have been asked by your president and some of the ladies and gentlemen here to tell them something about my work and what I have been doing. It may be interesting to some here, but not so much so to me. In fact, I do not quite know how to tell it to you, for this will have been the first time in my life that I have spoken on that subject. 

Now, to understand what I have been trying to do, in my small way, I will take you, in imagination, to India. We have not time to go into all the details and all the ramifications of the subject; nor is it possible for you to understand all the complexities in a foreign race in this short time. Suffice it to say, I will at least try to give you a little picture of what India is like. 

It is like a gigantic building all tumbled down in ruins. At first sight, then, there is little hope. It is a nation gone and ruined. But you wait and study, then you see something beyond that. The truth is that so long as the principle, the ideal, of which the outer man is the expression, is not hurt or destroyed, the man lives, and there is hope for that man. If your coat is stolen twenty times, that is no reason why you should be destroyed. You can get a new coat. The coat is unessential. The fact that a rich man is robbed does not hurt the vitality of the man, does not mean death. The man will survive.
Standing on this principle, we look in and we see - what? India is no longer a political power; it is an enslaved race. Indians have no say, no voice in their own government; they are three hundred millions of slaves - nothing more! The average income of a man in India is two shillings a month. The common state of the vast mass of the people is starvation, so that, with the least decrease in income, millions die. A little famine means death. So there, too, when I look on that side of India, I see ruin-hopeless ruin.
But we find that the Indian race never stood for wealth. Although they acquired immense wealth, perhaps more than any other nation ever acquired, yet the nation did not stand for wealth. It was a powerful race for ages, yet we find that that nation never stood for power, never went out of the country to conquer. Quite content within their own boundaries, they never fought anybody. The Indian nation never stood for imperial glory. Wealth and power, then, were not the ideals of the race.

What then? Whether they were wrong or right - that is not the question we discuss - that nation, among all the children of men, has believed, and believed intensely, that this life is not real. The real is God; and they must cling unto that God through thick and thin. In the midst of their degradation, religion came first. The Hindu man drinks religiously, sleeps religiously, walks religiously, marries religiously, robs religiously.
Did you ever see such a country? If you want to get up a gang of robbers, the leader will have to preach some sort of religion, then formulate some bogus metaphysics, and say that this method is the clearest and quickest way to get God. Then he finds a following, otherwise not. That shows that the vitality of the race, the mission of the race is religion; and because that has not been touched, therefore that race lives.
See Rome. Rome's mission was imperial power, expansion. And so soon as that was touched, Rome fell to pieces, passed out. The mission of Greece was intellect, as soon as that was touched, why, Greece passed out. So in modern times, Spain and all these modern countries. Each nation has a mission for the world. So long as that mission is not hurt, that nation lives, despite every difficulty. But as soon as its mission is destroyed, the nation collapses.

Now, that vitality of India has not been touched yet. They have not given up that, and it is still strong - in spite of all their superstitions. Hideous superstitions are there, most revolting some of them. Never mind. The national life - current is still there - the mission of the race.

The Indian nation never will be a powerful conquering people - never. They will never be a great political power; that is not their business, that is not the note India has to play in the great harmony of nations. But what has she to play? God, and God alone. She clings unto that like grim death. Still there is hope there.
So, then, after your analysis, you come to the conclusion that all these things, all this poverty and misery, are of no consequence - the man is living still, and therefore there is hope.

Well! You see religious activities going on all through the country. I do not recall a year that has not given birth to several new sects in India. The stronger the current, the more the whirlpools and eddies. Sects are not signs of decay, they are a sign of life. Let sects multiply, till the time comes when every one of us is a sect, each individual. We need not quarrel about that.

Now, take your country. (I do not mean any criticism). Here the social laws, the political formation -  everything is made to facilitate man's journey in this life. He may live very happily so long as he is on this earth. Look at your streets - how clean! Your beautiful cities! And in how many ways a man can make money! How many channels to get enjoyment in this life! But, if a man here should say, "Now look here, I shall sit down under this tree and meditate; I do not want to work", why, he would have to go to jail. See! There would be no chance for him at all. None. A man can live in this society only if he falls in line. He has to join in this rush for the enjoyment of good in this life, or he dies.

Now let us go back to India. There, if a man says, "I shall go and sit on the top of that mountain and look at the tip of my nose all the rest of my days", everybody says, "Go, and Godspeed to you!" He need not speak a word. Somebody brings him a little cloth, and he is all right. But if a man says, "Behold, I am going to enjoy a little of this life", every door is closed to him.

I say that the ideas of both countries are unjust. I see no reason why a man here should not sit down and look at the tip of his nose if he likes. Why should everybody here do just what the majority does? I see no reason.

Nor why, in India, a man should not have the goods of this life and make money. But you see how those vast millions are forced to accept the opposite point of view by tyranny. This is the tyranny of the sages. This is the tyranny of the great, tyranny of the spiritual, tyranny of the intellectual, tyranny of the wise. And the tyranny of the wise, mind you, is much more powerful than the tyranny of the ignorant. The wise, the intellectual, when they take to forcing their opinions upon others, know a hundred thousand ways to make bonds and barriers which it is not in the power of the ignorant to break.

Now, I say that this thing has got to stop. There is no use in sacrificing millions and millions of people to produce one spiritual giant. If it is possible to make a society where the spiritual giant will be produced and all the rest of the people will be happy as well, that is good; but if the millions have to be ground down, that is unjust. Better that the one great man should suffer for the salvation of the world.

In every nation you will have to work through their methods. To every man you will have to speak in his own language. Now, in England or in America, if you want to preach religion to them, you will have to work through political methods - make organizations, societies, with voting, balloting, a president, and so on, because that is the language, the method of the Western race. On the other hand, if you want to speak of politics in India, you must speak through the language of religion. You will have to tell them something like this: "The man who cleans his house every morning will acquire such and such an amount of merit, he will go to heaven, or he comes to God." Unless you put it that way, they will not listen to you. It is a question of language. The thing done is the same. But with every race, you will have to speak their language in order to reach their hearts. And that is quite just. We need not fret about that.

In the Order to which I belong we are called Sannyâsins. The word means "a man who has renounced". This is a very, very, very ancient Order. Even Buddha, who was 560 years before Christ, belonged to that Order. He was one of the reformers of his Order. That was all. So ancient! You find it mentioned away back in the Vedas, the oldest book in the world. In old India there was the regulation that every man and woman, towards the end of their lives, must get out of social life altogether and think of nothing except God and their own salvation. This was to get ready for the great event - death. So old people used to become Sannyasins in those early days. Later on, young people began to give up the world. And young people are active. They could not sit down under a tree and think all the time of their own death, so they went about preaching and starting sects, and so on. Thus, Buddha, being young, started that great reform. Had he been an old man, he would have looked at the tip of his nose and died quietly.

The Order is not a church, and the people who join the Order are not priests. There is an absolute difference between the priests and the Sannyasins. In India, priesthood, like every other business in a social life, is a hereditary profession. A priest's son will become a priest, just as a carpenter's son will be a carpenter, or a blacksmith's son a blacksmith. The priest must always be married. The Hindu does not think a man is complete unless he has a wife. An unmarried man has no right to perform religious ceremonies.
The Sannyasins do not possess property, and they do not marry. Beyond that there is no organization. The only bond that is there is the bond between the teacher and the taught - and that is peculiar to India. The teacher is not a man who comes just to teach me, and I pay him so much, and there it ends. In India it is really like an adoption. The teacher is more than my own father, and I am truly his child, his son in every respect. I owe him obedience and reverence first, before my own father even; because, they say, the father gave me this body, but he showed me the way to salvation, he is greater than father. And we carry this love, this respect for our teacher all our lives. And that is the only organization that exists. I adopt my disciples. Sometimes the teacher will be a young man and the disciple a very old man. But never mind, he is the son, and he calls me "Father", and I have to address him as my son, my daughter, and so on.
Now, I happened to get an old man to teach me, and he was very peculiar. He did not go much for intellectual scholarship, scarcely studied books; but when he was a boy he was seized with the tremendous idea of getting truth direct. First he tried by studying his own religion. Then he got the idea that he must get the truth of other religions; and with that idea he joined all the sects, one after another. For the time being he did exactly what they told him to do - lived with the devotees of these different sects in turn, until interpenetrated with the particular ideal of that sect. After a few years he would go to another sect. When he had gone through with all that, he came to the conclusion that they were all good. He had no criticism to offer to any one; they are all so many paths leading to the same goal. And then he said, "That is a glorious thing, that there should be so many paths, because if there were only one path, perhaps it would suit only an individual man. The more the number of paths, the more the chance for every one of us to know the truth. If I cannot be taught in one language, I will try another, and so on". Thus his benediction was for every religion.
Now, all the ideas that I preach are only an attempt to echo his ideas. Nothing is mine originally except the wicked ones, everything I say which is false and wicked. But every word that I have ever uttered which is true and good is simply an attempt to echo his voice. Read his life by Prof. Max Muller. (Ramakrishna: His Life and Sayings, first published in London in 1896. Reprinted in 1951 by Advaita Ashrama.)
Well, there at his feet I conceived these ideas - there with some other young men. I was just a boy. I went there when I was about sixteen. Some of the other boys were still younger, some a little older - about a dozen or more. And together we conceived that this ideal had to be spread. And not only spread, but made practical. That is to say, we must show the spirituality of the Hindus, the mercifulness of the Buddhists, the activity of the Christians, the brotherhood of the Mohammedans, by our practical lives. "We shall start a universal religion now and here," we said, "we will not wait".

Our teacher was an old man who would never touch a coin with his hands. He took just the little food offered, just so many yards of cotton cloth, no more. He could never be induced to take any other gift. With all these marvellous ideas, he was strict, because that made him free. The monk in India is the friend of the prince today, dines with him; and tomorrow he is with the beggar, sleeps under a tree. He must come into contact with everyone, must always move about. As the saying is, "The rolling stone gathers no moss". The last fourteen years of my life, I have never been for three months at a time in any one place - continually rolling. So do we all.

Now, this handful of boys got hold of these ideas, and all the practical results that sprang out of these ideas. Universal religion, great sympathy for the poor, and all that are very good in theory, but one must practise.
Then came the sad day when our old teacher died. We nursed him the best we could. We had no friends. Who would listen to a few boys, with their crank notions? Nobody. At least, in India, boys are nobodies. Just think of it - a dozen boys, telling people vast, big ideas, saying they are determined to work these ideas out in life. Why, everybody laughed. From laughter it became serious; it became persecution. Why, the parents of the boys came to feel like spanking every one of us. And the more we were derided, the more determined we became.

Then came a terrible time - for me personally and for all the other boys as well. But to me came such misfortune! On the one side was my mother, my brothers. My father died at that time, and we were left poor. Oh, very poor, almost starving all the time! I was the only hope of the family, the only one who could do anything to help them. I had to stand between my two worlds. On the one hand, I would have to see my mother and brothers starve unto death; on the other, I had believed that this man's ideas were for the good of India and the world, and had to be preached and worked out. And so the fight went on in my mind for days and months. Sometimes I would pray for five or six days and nights together without stopping. Oh, the agony of those days! I was living in hell! The natural affections of my boy's heart drawing me to my family - I could not bear to see those who were the nearest and dearest to me suffering. On the other hand, nobody to sympathize with me. Who would sympathize with the imaginations of a boy - imaginations that caused so much suffering to others? Who would sympathize with me? None - except one.

That one's sympathy brought blessing and hope. She was a woman. Our teacher, this great monk, was married when he was a boy and she a mere child. When he became a young man, and all this religious zeal was upon him, she came to see him. Although they had been married for long, they had not seen very much of each other until they were grown up. Then he said to his wife, "Behold, I am your husband; you have a right to this body. But I cannot live the sex life, although I have married you. I leave it to your judgment". And she wept and said, "God speed you! The Lord bless you! Am I the woman to degrade you? If I can, I will help you. Go on in your work".

That was the woman. The husband went on and became a monk in his own way; and from a distance the wife went on helping as much as she could. And later, when the man had become a great spiritual giant, she came - really, she was the first disciple - and she spent the rest of her life taking care of the body of this man. He never knew whether he was living or dying, or anything. Sometimes, when talking, he would get so excited that if he sat on live charcoals, he did not know it. Live charcoals! Forgetting all about his body, all the time.

Well, that lady, his wife, was the only one who sympathized with the idea of those boys. But she was powerless. She was poorer than we were. Never mind! We plunged into the breach. I believed, as I was living, that these ideas were going to rationalize India and bring better days to many lands and foreign races. With that belief, came the realization that it is better that a few persons suffer than that such ideas should die out of the world. What if a mother or two brothers die? It is a sacrifice. Let it be done. No great thing can be done without sacrifice. The heart must be plucked out and the bleeding heart placed upon the altar. Then great things are done. Is there any other way? None have found it. I appeal to each one of you, to those who have accomplished any great thing. Oh, how much it has cost! What agony! What torture! What terrible suffering is behind every deed of success in every life! You know that, all of you.

And thus we went on, that band of boys. The only thing we got from those around us was a kick and a curse - that was all. Of course, we had to beg from door to door for our food: got hips and haws - the refuse of everything - a piece of bread here and there. We got hold of a broken-down old house, with hissing cobras living underneath; and because that was the cheapest, we went into that house and lived there.
Thus we went on for some years, in the meanwhile making excursions all over India, trying to bring about the idea gradually. Ten years were spent without a ray of light! Ten more years! A thousand times despondency came; but there was one thing always to keep us hopeful - the tremendous faithfulness to each other, the tremendous love between us. I have got a hundred men and women around me; if I become the devil himself tomorrow, they will say, "Here we are still! We will never give you up!" That is a great blessing. In happiness, in misery, in famine, in pain, in the grave, in heaven, or in hell who never gives me up is my friend. Is such friendship a joke? A man may have salvation through such friendship. That brings salvation if we can love like that. If we have that faithfulness, why, there is the essence of all concentration. You need not worship any gods in the world if you have that faith, that strength, that love. And that was there with us all throughout that hard time. That was there. That made us go from the Himalayas to Cape Comorin, from the Indus to the Brahmaputra.

This band of boys began to travel about. Gradually we began to draw attention: ninety per cent was antagonism, very little of it was helpful. For we had one fault: we were boys - in poverty and with all the roughness of boys. He who has to make his own way in life is a bit rough, he has not much time to be smooth and suave and polite - "my lady and my gentleman", and all that. You have seen that in life, always. He is a rough diamond, he has not much polish, he is a jewel in an indifferent casket.
And there we were. "No compromise!" was the watchword. "This is the ideal, and this has got to be carried out. If we meet the king, though we die, we must give him a bit of our minds; if the peasant, the same". Naturally, we met with antagonism.

But, mind you, this is life's experience; if you really want the good of others, the whole universe may stand against you and cannot hurt you. It must crumble before your power of the Lord Himself in you if you are sincere and really unselfish. And those boys were that. They came as children, pure and fresh from the hands of nature. Said our Master: I want to offer at the altar of the Lord only those flowers that have not even been smelled, fruits that have not been touched with the fingers. The words of the great man sustained us all. For he saw through the future life of those boys that he collected from the streets of Calcutta, so to say. People used to laugh at him when he said, "You will see - this boy, that boy, what he becomes". His faith was unalterable: "Mother showed it to me. I may be weak, but when She says this is so - She can never make mistakes - it must be so.

"So things went on and on for ten years without any light, but with my health breaking all the time. It tells on the body in the long run: sometimes one meal at nine in the evening, another time a meal at eight in the morning, another after two days, another after three days - and always the poorest and roughest thing. Who is going to give to the beggar the good things he has? And then, they have not much in India. And most of the time walking, climbing snow peaks, sometimes ten miles of hard mountain climbing, just to get a meal. They eat unleavened bread in India, and sometimes they have it stored away for twenty or thirty days, until it is harder than bricks; and then they will give a square of that. I would have to go from house to house to collect sufficient for one meal. And then the bread was so hard, it made my mouth bleed to eat it. Literally, you can break your teeth on that bread. Then I would put it in a pot and pour over it water from the river. For months and months I existed that way - of course it was telling on the health.

Then I thought, I have tried India: it is time for me to try another country. At that time your Parliament of Religions was to be held, and someone was to be sent from India. I was just a vagabond, but I said, "If you send me, I am going. I have not much to lose, and I do not care if I lose that." It was very difficult to find the money, but after a long struggle they got together just enough to pay for my passage - and I came. Came one or two months earlier, so that I found myself drifting about in the streets here, without knowing anybody.
But finally the Parliament of Religions opened, and I met kind friends, who helped me right along. I worked a little, collected funds, started two papers, and so on. After that I went over to England and worked there. At the same time I carried on the work for India in America too.

My plan for India, as it has been developed and centralized, is this: I have told you of our lives as monks there, how we go from door to door, so that religion is brought to everybody without charge, except, perhaps, a broken piece of bread. That is why you see the lowest of the low in India holding the most exalted religious ideas. It is all through the work of these monks. But ask a man, "Who are the English?" - he does not know. He says perhaps, "They are the children of those giants they speak of in those books, are they not?" "Who governs you?" "We do not know." "What is the government?" They do not know. But they know philosophy. It is a practical want of intellectual education about life on this earth they suffer from. These millions and millions of people are ready for life beyond this world - is not that enough for them? Certainly not. They must have a better piece of bread and a better piece of rag on their bodies. The great question is: How to get that better bread and better rag for these sunken millions.

First, I must tell you, there is great hope for them, because, you see, they are the gentlest people on earth. Not that they are timid. When they want to fight, they fight like demons. The best soldiers the English have are recruited from the peasantry of India. Death is a thing of no importance to them. Their attitude is "Twenty times I have died before, and I shall die many times after this. What of that?" They never turn back. They are not given to much emotion, but they make very good fighters.

Their instinct, however, is to plough. If you rob them, murder them, tax them, do anything to them, they will be quiet and gentle, so long as you leave them free to practice their religion. They never interfere with the religion of others. "Leave us liberty to worship our gods, and take everything else!" That is their attitude. When the English touch them there, trouble starts. That was the real cause of the 1857 Mutiny - they would not bear religious repression. The great Mohammedan governments were simply blown up because they touched the Indians' religion.

But aside from that, they are very peaceful, very quiet, very gentle, and, above all, not given to vice. The absence of any strong drink, oh, it makes them infinitely superior to the mobs of any other country. You cannot compare the decency of life among the poor in India with life in the slums here. A slum means poverty, but poverty does not mean sin, indecency, and vice in India. In other countries, the opportunities are such that only the indecent and the lazy need be poor. There is no reason for poverty unless one is a fool or a blackguard — the sort who want city life and all its luxuries. They will not go into the country. They say, "We are here with all the fun, and you must give us bread". But that is not the case in India, where the poor fellows work hard from morning to sunset, and somebody else takes the bread out of their hands, and their children go hungry. Notwithstanding the millions of tons of wheat raised in India, scarcely a grain passes the mouth of a peasant. He lives upon the poorest corn, which you would not feed to your canary-birds.
Now there is no reason why they should suffer such distress - these people; oh, so pure and good! We hear so much talk about the sunken millions and the degraded women of India - but none come to our help. What do they say? They say, "You can only be helped, you can only be good by ceasing to be what you are. It is useless to help Hindus." These people do not know the history of races. There will be no more India if they change their religion and their institutions, because that is the vitality of that race. It will disappear; so, really, you will have nobody to help.

Then there is the other great point to learn: that you can never help really. What can we do for each other? You are growing in your own life, I am growing in my own. It is possible that I can give you a push in your life, knowing that, in the long run, all roads lead to Rome. It is a steady growth. No national civilization is perfect yet. Give that civilization a push, and it will arrive at its own goal: do not strive to change it. Take away a nation's institutions, customs, and manners, and what will be left? They hold the nation together.
But here comes the very learned foreign man, and he says, "Look here; you give up all those institutions and customs of thousands of years, and take my tomfool tinpot and be happy". This is all nonsense.
We will have to help each other, but we have to go one step farther: the first thing is to become unselfish in help. "If you do just what I tell you to do, I will help you; otherwise not." Is that help?
And so, if the Hindus want to help you spiritually, there will be no question of limitations: perfect unselfishness. I give, and there it ends. It is gone from me. My mind, my powers, my everything that I have to give, is given: given with the idea to give, and no more. I have seen many times people who have robbed half the world, and they gave $20,000 "to convert the heathen". What for? For the benefit of the heathen, or for their own souls? Just think of that.

And the Nemesis of crime is working. We men try to hoodwink our own eyes. But inside the heart, He has remained, the real Self. He never forgets. We can never delude Him. His eyes will never be hoodwinked. Whenever there is any impulse of real charity, it tells, though it be at the end of a thousand years. Obstructed, it yet wakens once more to burst like a thunderbolt. And every impulse where the motive is selfish, self-seeking - though it may be launched forth with all the newspapers blazoning, all the mobs standing and cheering - it fails to reach the mark.

I am not taking pride in this. But, mark you, I have told the story of that group of boys. Today there is not a village, not a man, not a woman in India that does not know their work and bless them. There is not a famine in the land where these boys do not plunge in and try to work and rescue as many as they can. And that strikes to the heart. The people come to know it. So help whenever you can, but mind what your motive is. If it is selfish, it will neither benefit those you help, nor yourself. If it is unselfish, it will bring blessings upon them to whom it is given, and infinite blessings upon you, sure as you are living. The Lord can never be hoodwinked. The law of Karma can never be hoodwinked.

Well then, my plans are, therefore, to reach these masses of India. Suppose you start schools all over India for the poor, still you cannot educate them. How can you? The boy of four years would better go to the plough or to work, than to your school. He cannot go to your school. It is impossible. Self-preservation is the first instinct. But if the mountain does not go to Mohammed, then Mohammed can come to the mountain. Why should not education go from door to door, say I. If a ploughman's boy cannot come to education, why not meet him at the plough, at the factory, just wherever he is? Go along with him, like his shadow. But there are these hundreds and thousands of monks, educating the people on the spiritual plane; why not let these men do the same work on the intellectual plane? Why should they not talk to the masses a little about history - about many things? The ears are the best educators. The best principles in our lives were those which we heard from our mothers through our ears. Books came much later. Book-learning is nothing. Through the ears we get the best formative principles. Then, as they get more and more interested, they may come to your books too. First, let it roll on and on - that is my idea.

Well, I must tell you that I am not a very great believer in monastic systems. They have great merits, and also great defects. There should be a perfect balance between the monastics and the householders. But monasticism has absorbed all the power in India. We represent the greatest power. The monk is greater than the prince. There is no reigning sovereign in India who dares to sit down when the "yellow cloth" is there. He gives up his seat and stands. Now, that is bad, so much power, even in the hands of good men - although these monastics have been the bulwark of the people. They stand between the priestcraft and knowledge. They are the centres of knowledge and reform. They are just what the prophets were among the Jews. The prophets were always preaching against the priests, trying to throw out superstitions. So are they in India. But all the same so much power is not good there; better methods should be worked out. But you can only work in the line of least resistance. The whole national soul there is upon monasticism. You go to India and preach any religion as a householder: the Hindu people will turn back and go out. If you have given up the world, however, they say, "He is good, he has given up the world. He is a sincere man, he wants to do what he preaches." What I mean to say is this, that it represents a tremendous power. What we can do is just to transform it, give it another form. This tremendous power in the hands of the roving Sannyasins of India has got to be transformed, and it will raise the masses up.

Now, you see, we have brought the plan down nicely on paper; but I have taken it, at the same time, from the regions of idealism. So far the plan was loose and idealistic. As years went on, it became more and more condensed and accurate; I began to see by actual working its defects, and all that.

What did I discover in its working on the material plane? First, there must be centres to educate these monks in the method of education. For instance, I send one of my men, and he goes about with a camera: he has to be taught in those things himself. In India, you will find every man is quite illiterate, and that teaching requires tremendous centres. And what does all that mean? Money. From the idealistic plane you come to everyday work. Well, I have worked hard, four years in your country, and two in England. And I am very thankful that some friends came to the rescue. One who is here today with you is amongst them. There are American friends and English friends who went over with me to India, and there has been a very rude beginning. Some English people came and joined the orders. One poor man worked hard and died in India. There are an Englishman and an Englishwoman who have retired; they have some means of their own, and they have started a centre in the Himalayas, educating the children. I have given them one of the papers I have started - a copy you will find there on the table - The Awakened India. And there they are instructing and working among the people. I have another centre in Calcutta. Of course, all great movements must proceed from the capital. For what is a capital? It is the heart of a nation. All the blood comes into the heart and thence it is distributed; so all the wealth, all the ideas, all the education, all spirituality will converge towards the capital and spread from it.

I am glad to tell you I have made a rude beginning. But the same work I want to do, on parallel lines, for women. And my principle is: each one helps himself. My help is from a distance. There are Indian women, English women, and I hope American women will come to take up the task. As soon as they have begun, I wash my hands of it. No man shall dictate to a woman; nor a woman to a man. Each one is independent. What bondage there may be is only that of love. Women will work out their own destinies - much better, too, than men can ever do for them. All the mischief to women has come because men undertook to shape the destiny of women. And I do not want to start with any initial mistake. One little mistake made then will go on multiplying; and if you succeed, in the long run that mistake will have assumed gigantic proportions and become hard to correct. So, if I made this mistake of employing men to work out this women's part of the work, why, women will never get rid of that - it will have become a custom. But I have got an opportunity. I told you of the lady who was my Master's wife. We have all great respect for her. She never dictates to us. So it is quite safe.

That part has to be accomplished.

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

FIRST INSPECTION REPORT OF TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF LICENSING AND REGULATION BOILER COMPLIANCE

 FIRST INSPECTION REPORT OF TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF LICENSING AND REGULATION  BOILER COMPLIANCE  ON JULY 21, 2011

1    Purpose

1.1    The purpose of this procedure is to describe how to complete the First Inspection Report.

2    Scope

2.1        This form will be used when an object is registered with the State for the first time.  It is used for identification purposes and does not mean it is authorized to operate.

3    General

3.1      The form to be used for the first inspection is known as TDLR FORM 005BLR.

3.2      Use black or blue ink to complete the form.

4    Description

4.1        The die stamps, corrosion-resistant metal tags and the Texas Boiler Number decals are controlled by the Boiler Program, TDLR and are issued upon successful completion of the Texas Commission exam.  More metal tags and decals, in packages of fifty, are issued upon request.

4.2        The procedure for use of the Texas Boiler Number, when stamping of the boiler is allowed, applying the numbered decal or the use of the corrosion-resistant metal tag, is described in the Texas Boiler Law and Rules, ref: 65.60(c)

4.3        Complete all blanks as described below:

                   Side 1 (Exhibit 1a)

                   (1)        Place the lower portion of the boiler decal, containing the Texas Boiler Number, in this area.  This will be the number you put on the object.

                   (2)            Enter the complete manufacturer's name (not assembler) as shown on the ASME stamping or nameplate.  Do not put trade or model names.

                   (3)  Enter the National Board number as shown on the ASME Code stamping or nameplate.

                                     .           If boiler has more than one National Board number, put the lowest number in the space provided and list the other numbers in the "Conditions" section.

                                     .           If the boiler does not have a National Board number, write "NONE" in the space provided.

.           All boilers except cast iron boilers require National Board registration.  If registration is required and the boiler does not have a National Board number, it must be identified as a violation in the violation section of the report.

(4)            Enter Manufacturer's serial number as shown on the ASME Code stamping or nameplate.

(5)            Enter the year built as shown on the ASME stamping or nameplate.
(Note:  This is a mandatory entry.  If estimated, "est." will be entered in front of year.)

(6)            Enter the appropriate inspection interval, A - “Annual”, B - “Biennial”, T - “Triennial”.

(7)            Enter the boiler type from the choices below:
C      -    Cast Iron
CA   -   Cast Aluminum
CK   -    Steam Pressure Cooker
DC   -    Direct Contact
E       -    Electric
F       -    Fire Tube
FW   -    Fire/Water Tube
O      -    Other (must be fully explained in conditions section)
PG    -    Process Steam Generator
SJ    -    Steam Jacketed Kettle
U      -    Unfired
W      -    Water Tube

(8)            Enter the boiler use from the choices below:

H      -    Hot Water Heating (provisions for thermal expansion must be addressed)
HT    -    High Temp Water Boiler
O      -    Other (must be fully explained in the conditions section)
P       -    Power
PP         Portable Power
R      -    Process
S       -    Steam Heat
SJ    -    Steam Jenny
W      -    Hot Water Supply (provisions for thermal expansion may be required)

(9)            Enter the year installed.
(Note:  This is a mandatory entry.  If estimated, "est." will be entered in front of year.)

(10)          Heating Surface (square feet) - The heating surface should only be indicated in square feet if available.  Do not use kilowatts (kW) or horsepower (H.P.).  To convert kW to heating surface, see Exhibit 2.

(11)          For Section IV potable water heaters and heating boilers, steam or hot water, enter the gallon capacity.

(12)          Check the appropriate block to indicate whether the boiler has a manhole.

(13)          This is asking if the object was built to ASME Code.  Check the appropriate block.

(14)          Enter the ASME Code stamp(s) shown on the boiler.  All boilers except special designed (Texas Special) boilers must be stamped to the applicable Section of the ASME Code.  If the boiler does not have a stamp and block 13 is “No”, enter “NONE” in the space provided and enter a “V” in the requirements section of the report.

A         -   Boiler Assembly (in conjunction with “S” stamp)
H         -   Heating Boilers
HLW  -   Water Heaters
M        -   Miniature Boilers
O         -   Other (explain)
S         -   Power Boilers
U         -   Pressure Vessels
U2      -   Division 2 Pressure Vessels
E             Electric

(15)          Max Design Steam Cap – Enter the maximum design steam capacity in lbs/HR from either the Manufacturer’s Data Report or the nameplate/Code stamping.
                  
                   (16)          Enter the manufacturer’s model number if shown. 

(17)          Enter the appropriate fuel from the choices below:
(Note:  If the boiler is fueled by more than one source, enter all fuel sources with the primary fuel first.)

AL       -       Alcohol
BD               Biodiesel
BG      -       Bagasse
BL       -       Black Liquor
BU      -       Butane
CK      -       Coke
CO      -       Coal
E         -       Electricity
FO       -       Fuel Oil
HS      -       Hydrogen Sulphide
HY      -       Hydrogen
KE      -       Kerosene
LD       -       LP/Diesel
ME      -       Methane
NF       -       Natural Gas/Fuel Oil
NG      -       Natural Gas
NM      -       Natural Gas/Methane
NP      -       Natural Gas/Propane
NR      -       Natural Gas/Recovered Heat
NS              Sulfur/Natural Gas
NW     -       Natural Gas/Wood
O         -       Other (explain)
PR      -       Propane
RE              Recovered Heat/Electric
RH      -       Recovered Heat
RN      -       Recovered Heat/Natural Gas
SE       -       Solar/Electric
SG      -       Sewer Gas
SN      -       Solid Waste/Natural Gas
SO      -       Solar
ST       -       Steam
SU      -       Sulphur
SW      -       Solid Waste-GRBG
WD     -       Wood
WS      -       Water/Steam
WT      -       Water

(18)          Enter the appropriate method of firing from the choices below:

A         -   Automatic
M        -   Manual
NF      -   Not Fired

(19)          Enter the Btu/hr input as shown on stamping or nameplate informa­tion.  For electric boilers, convert kW to Btu/hr (Exhibit 2).  If informa­tion is not shown or is not applicable, enter unknown or N/A.  This information is mandatory for all heating boilers.

(20)          Enter Btu/hr output as shown on stamping or nameplate information.

(21)          Check the appropriate block.

(22)          Enter the number of sections if the boiler is cast iron.

(23)          Enter the number of drums and/or shells.

(24)          Enter the diameter in ID or OD for shell(s) and/or drum(s).

(25)          Enter overall length of shell or drum in feet and inches.

(26)          Enter the number of installed gage glasses.

(27)          Enter the number of gage cocks per gage glass if gage cocks are installed.

(28)          Provide installer's name and address, if known.

(29)          Indicate the Code or non-Code status of the installed expansion tank. Note:  Provision for thermal expansion is mandatory for hot water heating boilers.  For closed systems operating above 30 psig, ASME Code Section VIII, Division 1 construction and stamping is required.  If the system is of the open type, clearly indicate in the condition section of the report the provisions for thermal expansion.  If this block is not applicable to the installation, check N/A.

(30)          Enter the maximum allowable working pressure of the tank.

(31)          Enter the capacity of the tank in gallons.

(32)          Check the appropriate block indicating Code status of boiler external piping.  This applies to Section I boilers and Section VIII, unfired boilers and process steam generators.

(33)          Enter the stamped maximum allowable working pressure as shown on the ASME stamping or nameplate.

(34)          Enter the complete business name at the boiler location.

(35)          Enter the boiler location address.  Do not list post office boxes unless it is shown in conjunc­tion with the actual location address and has the same zip code.  Do not put "SAME".

(36)          Enter the boiler location address if an additional address line is needed.

(37)          Enter the city where the boiler is located.

(38)          Enter the zip code for the boiler location address.

(39)          Enter the county where the object is located.

(40)          Enter the telephone number (if any) at the location.  Include the area code.

(41)          Enter the location on site (i.e., boiler room, laundry room, etc.).

(42)          Enter owner's complete business name.  Do not enter “same”.

(43)          Enter owner's complete mailing address.  Do not enter “same”.

(44)          Enter owner's complete mailing address if an additional address line is needed.

(45)          Enter owner's city.

(46)          Enter owner's state (two letter abbreviation).

(47)          Enter owner's mailing address zip code.

(48)          Enter owner's phone number.  Include the area code.

(49)          Check the appropriate block.  If other, provide the information in the "Conditions" section.

(50)          Enter the nature of the business.

Side 2 (Exhibit 1b)

(51)          Double Block and Bleed – Complete this block when two or more boiler are connected to a common steam header, or when a single boiler is connected to a header having another steam source, the connection from each boiler having a manhole opening is fitted with two stop valves having an ample free-blow drain between them.  This includes all piping from the boiler proper up to and including the second stop valve and the free-blow drain valve.

(52)          Enter the MAWP of the low water fuel cutoff(s).  Note:  The low water fuel cutoff device(s) must be equal to or greater than the MAWP for the boiler.

(53)          Check the type of installed low water fuel cutoff(s).  Other acceptable codes, not listed as a check box, are Expansion Ring and Thermalcouple.  If other, describe.

(54)          Enter the size of the safety relief valve(s) inlet and outlet in inches.

(55)          Enter the safety relief valve set pressure.  This pressure cannot exceed the pressure allowed unless documented as a violation.

(56)          Enter the safety relief valve capacity and check appropriate block to indicate Btu/hr or lbs. of steam per hour.

(57)          Minimum SV/SRV Capacity (Section IV only) – Enter the minimum safety/safety relief valve capacity in lbs/HR as indicated on the valve body data plate.

(58)          Give the overall condition of the boiler.  Enter any other applicable information as addressed in previous blocks (i.e., other billing address, additional National Board numbers, etc.).

(59)          List all Code violations or additional require­ments, which must be met prior to issuance of a Certificate of Operation.  See AIA Procedure 6 for violations.

(60)          Enter the alpha code shown in the left column for the appropriate fee type:

B         -   Heating Boiler; no Manhole
C         -   Heating Boiler; with Manhole
D         -   Non-heating Boiler

(61)          Enter appropriate fee.

(62)          Check the appropriate block for the type of inspection performed.  Where construction will permit, all boilers must receive an internal inspection.

(63)          Check the appropriate block or blocks.

(64)          Enter the physical inspection date.

(65)          This block is for TDLR use only.  Do not make an entry. 

(66)          Sign your name.  Copies of signatures are unacceptable.

(67)          Enter your 4 digit Texas Commission number.

(68)          Enter your inspecting organization number.

(69)          Have the person present at the time of inspection or contact person sign the inspection report.  This is mandatory.

(70)          Have the contact person enter the date they signed the report.

(71)          Have the contact person provide their phone number.

(72)          Based on the condition of the boiler, check the appropriate block to indicate your recommendation for issuance of the Certificate of Operation.  Note:  If violations exist on the boiler per the Texas Boiler Law and Rules, the “No” block must be checked and a repair requirements form must be completed and submitted with the report.  Reference AIA Procedure 6.

(73)          Enter the Texas Boiler number assigned.

(74)          Enter the physical inspection date.

(75)          Check appropriate block.

(76)          Enter your inspecting organization name.

(77)          Enter your Texas Commission number.

(78)          Check appropriate block.

4.4        Remove the bottom portion and give to the owner/operator as proof of inspection.

4.5        Mail completed inspection report, repair requirements form, when applicable and the Manufacturer’s Data Report (if one can be obtained) to TDLR within 30 days of inspection.

4.6        Should you need additional information, contact TDLR at (800) 722-7843 or (800) 803-9202.
Approved:
Luis Ponce, Chief Inspector

July 21, 2011


 
TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF LICENSING AND REGULATION
BOILER COMPLIANCE
                                  FIRST INSPECTION REPORT               Exhibit 1a

TX BOILER# DECAL
MANUFACTURER
NAT’L BOARD#
SERIAL NUMBER
YR BUILT
INTVL

1
2
3
4
5
6

BOILER TYPE
BOILER USE
YEAR INSTALLED

7
8
9

HEATING SURFACE
CAPACITY (GAL)
MANHOLE?
ASME CODE?
ASME CODE STAMP
MAX DESIGN STEAM CAP

10
11
12
YES NO

YES13 NO
14
15

MFGR MODEL #
FUEL


FIRING METHOD


Btu/hr INPUT
Btu/hr OUTPUT

 NEW  21
 SECOND-HAND

16
17
18
19
20

C.I. SECTIONS
SHELL OR DRUM
SHELL OR DRUM DIA.
OVERALL LENGTH
GAGE GLASS
GAGE COCKS


 NO:    22

 NO:    23
       ID
24     OD

 25  FT.     IN.
26
27

BOILER INSTALLER’S NAME AND ADDRESS

NAME                    28
ADDRESS(2)

ADDRESS(1)

CITY/ST/ZIP

EXPANSION TANK ASME?
29
BOILER INSPECTION ADDRESS
OWNER ADDRESS INFORMATION

LOCATION NAME
OWNER NAME

YES NO
N/A

34
42

EXPANSION TANK MAWP

LOCATION STREET ADDRESS(1)
OWNER MAILING ADDRESS(1)

30
35
43

EXPANSION TANK CAP. (GAL)
LOCATION STREET ADDRESS(2)
OWNER MAILING ADDRESS(2)

36
44

31

CITY
ZIP CODE
CITY
ST
ZIP CODE

EXTERNAL PIPE ASME?
37
38
45
46
47

YES NO

N/A 32

COUNTY
LOCATION PHONE
OWNER PHONE
SEND BILL TO:

39
(   )    40
(   )    48
LOCATION OWNER OTHER (IF OTHER, SPECIFY IN “CONDITIONS”)49

STAMPED BOILER MAWP

LOCATION ON SITE

NATURE OF BUSINESS

33

41

50



























 
Exhibit 1b
DOUBLE BLOCK & BLEED
LOW WATER CUTOFF MAWP
LOW WATER CUTOFF TYPE
51     YES   NO    N/A
52
 PROBE TYPE   FLOAT & CHAMBER       TRANSMITTER
 FLOW SWITCH  PRESSURE DIFFERENTIAL OTHER___ 53___
SAFETY-RELIEF VALVE SIZE:
SAFETY-RELIEF VALVE SET PRESSURE:
SAFETY-RELIEF VALVE CAPACITY:
1.               54“X            
1.                 55                 PSI
1.       56                  Btu/hr      #/hr
2.               “X              
2.                                     PSI
2.                           Btu/hr       #/hr
MINIMUM SV/SRV CAPACITY
(SECTION IV ONLY)
                     57
CONDITIONS   With respect to the internal surface describe and state location of any scale, oil or other deposits.  Give location and extent of any corrosion and state whether active or inactive.  State location and extent of any erosion, grooving, bulging, warping, cracking or similar condition.  Report on any defective rivets, bowed, loose or broken stays.  State condition of all tubes, tube ends, coils, nipples, etc.  Describe any adverse conditions with respect to pressure gage, water column, gage glass, gage cocks, safety valves, etc.  Report condition of setting, linings, baffles, supports, etc.  Describe any major changes or repairs made since last inspection.                             58




REQUIREMENTS (LIST CODE VIOLATIONS)
59





FEE
TYPE
FEE
AMT($)
INSPECTION
TYPE  62
TEXAS BOILER # IDENTIFIED BY  63
DATE
INSPECTED
CERTIFICATE
EXPIRATION DT
60
61
INTERNAL
EXTERNAL
DECAL STAMPED TAGGED
_______64______
(MM/DD/YY)
_____65_______
(MM/DD/YY)
  I HEREBY CERTIFY THAT THIS IS A TRUE REPORT AS A RESULT OF MY INSPECTION.


  ________________66___________________  _____67_______  ___68____
         SIGNATURE OF INSPECTOR            TX COMM. #     INSP. ORG.

  ________________69________________________________  ______70____________
    SIGNATURE OF INDIVIDUAL PRESENT AT INSPECTION     DATE (MM/DD/YY)

  _(____)_________71___________
      INDIVIDUAL’S PHONE #
IS CONDITION OF
OBJECT SUCH THAT
A CERTIFICATE
MAY BE ISSUED?
       YES
       NO  72
(IF NO, EXPLAIN FULLY UNDER CONDITIONS.)
UPON COMPLETION OF THE INSPECTION, RETURN THIS REPORT TO TDLR IMMEDIATELY. LEAVE THE
RECEIPT BELOW WITH THE OWNER/OPERATOR.











THIS IS YOUR PROOF OF INSPECTION ONLY.               TEXAS
BOILER #
THIS IS NOT A CERTIFICATE OF OPERATION.          ____73______

INSPECTION      VIOLATIONS               INSPECTING                INSPECTOR
DATE                  NOTED?                      ORGANIZATION                   NUMBER

        74                     YES    75   NO                    ______76_______         ____77_____
AN INVOICE WILL FOLLOW FOR THE CERTIFICATE/INSPECTION
78  FEE OF:  $70.00 (AIA INSP.)  $110.00 (STATE INSP.)  $140.00 (STATE INSP.)
FEE IS INCURRED FOR EACH BOILER INSPECTED.                                                   

TDLR FORM 005BLR 12/07

                                                                                                                                                    Exhibit 2

This formula should be used to convert kW to Sq. Ft. heating surface.

Alternating Current


Sq. Ft. = kW x 3413.0 x 3.8
           33475


This formula should be used to convert amperes/volts to kilowatts.

Direct Current
Alternating Current
Single Phase
Three Phase



____I x E____
1000



___I x E x P.F.__
1000



I x E x 1.73 x P.F.
1000


I   =  Amperes
E  =  Volts
P  =  Power Factor   (Power Factor can be obtained from each city utility company.  However, each city in Texas has a Power Factor over .95.  Therefore, a Power Factor of .95 can always be used.)

To convert kW to Btu/hr:   kW x 3.5 x 1,000 = Btu/hr